Scorekeeping: Top 3 per Class
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Scorekeeping: World Cup System
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Scorekeeping: Teams
Q: Who can form a team and under what conditions?
A: Any group can form a team; there are no size-limits; participants may only switch teams during September through May.
Q: When are points earned?
A: Race points are earned upon crossing the finish line.
Q: How are points given out?
A: Points equal to the number of Classified Finishers (NOVICE, YOUTH, JUNIOR, SENIOR, MASTER) go with the best time among Match Class Participants. (YOUTH, JUNIOR, SENIOR, MASTER)
Q: If only 1 JUNIOR finishes a race, how many points will he or she receive?
A: 1 point.
Q: If 100 Classified Racers finish a race, how many points will Match Class person with the best time receive?
A: 100 points.
Q: If there are only 2 teams, which team will win?
A: Any 3 will beat any 1
Any 5 will beat any 2
Any 13 will beat any 3
Q: What's a good simple strategy for team victory over the course of the season?
A: Get as many participants as you can for the home events, and send you best 4, 5 or 6 to the away events.
Q: What else?
A: Being on a team helps motivate the organizers to draw in more participants for more points to beat the other clubs' organizers. People are free to declare they will run as an Independent, at registration, if they don't want to be on any team.
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Some Links
The Constitution of the United States of America. (Cornell University Law School)
Official Site for the charters of freedom.
U.S. Constitution comic book. The author seems to be flying high on his own Second Amendment skepticism, while totally ignoring similarities between the First and Second Amendments, such as both use the phrase "the right of the people" and both have been influenced by major advances in technology. But, otherwise, I learned a lot from this well written and illustrated book.
Oldest commissioned naval vessel in the world, The U.S.S. Constitution.
